First of all, there is more to world health care than just Canada and the United States. The US is an extreme outlier in healthcare. Forget it. Don't saddle me with the US system just because I advocate more private healthcare.
Please get that.
Next - there already is PLENTY of private spending on our healthcare system. For instance, gases used in hospitals is typically supplied privately. So is linen services, never mind all the supplies, drugs, cleaning equipment, paint, flooring, parking lot paving, wiring, copper used in wires, vending machines, on and on. So unless you advocate for a centrally planned economy producing EVERYTHING, you ALREADY have private enterprise in healthcare, and lots of it.
The only question is where to use private services, and where not to.
Next, Canada's health care is not particularly good in international rankings.
Next, every product and service in our society has demand and supply somehow managed. When demand is NOT managed by price - i.e. it is 'free' at point of use, then it will be managed by supply via rationing.
Rationing can take many forms, from limits imposed on users, (literally ration cards or records), to..in the Canadian system...rationing via lines or wait times. This is precisely what existed in the Soviet Union, where lining up for virtually everything was a way of life. No way around it. it sucked, unless you regard as a significant portion of your life spent waiting in line as a positive outcome for society.
The answer of the left is ALWAYS - "SPEND MORE" to solve the problem.
WE ALREADY SPEND MORE than other countries that do better than we do, and, again, I am NOT including the United States.
Among OECD member countries, the United States had the highest percentage of gross domestic product spent on health care in 2020.
www.statista.com
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We are way up there near the top in spending, but not in results. Clearly we need to operate smarter, more efficiently.
I've said enough. Look at other countries that do better with less money, then copy them without wearing any ideological blinders from either side of the political spectrum.